2012/8/28 John Kasunich <[email protected]>: > > > On Tue, Aug 28, 2012, at 01:50 AM, EBo wrote: >> Well, I am a strong proponent of eXtreme Programming (XP) and similar >> Test Driven Development (TDD) methodologies. They can be overdone >> though... >> >> The nice thing about these discussions is that we could use them to >> start to develop an automated test suite and work away on various parts >> until the tests succeed (the XP approach). Even if you tare the code >> base down and start over again the test suite provides its own resource. >> In addition, when you move from one platform to another you can use >> this as a base level test to verify that it is working as expected. >> >> So I would agree lets blue sky this puppy, but lets start small... > > I want to raise a red flag about XP and other test driven development > methods. They work fine for deterministic situations, but you can't > use testing to prove the absence of race conditions and other rare > bugs that can occur when doing realtime programming. It is very > easy to write code that will work fine until one instance of the > program happens to interrupt another during that single line of code > that isn't properly re-entrant. Said interrupt may happen once a > year, or less, and testing will never find it. > > Realtime stuff needs to be designed like hardware, not software. > Hardware engineers have long and expensive prototyping cycles, so > they do their absolute best to get it right and know it is right. > > I've been following this thread with some interest. RTAPI was > designed with the goal of making it relatively simple to add > new RTOS's as they became available, and I would hope that is > still true. In theory, no code other than rtapi itself should > need to be changed. However, the build system is another thing > all together, and I'm sure adding the option to build for RT-PREEMPT > instead of RTAI or user-space sim mode will be a major task. >
Yes it is :-D ..... but it's been deno before, so lets check the old patches out ? Any chance to give the makefiles a rework ? :-D > If any significant work is going to be done in RTAPI, the first > step should be to read rtapi.h, then go grepping through the > codebase and see what subset of rtapi.h is actually used. I'm > 99.94% sure that LCNC does not use RTAPI FIFOs, so they should > be dropped. (When I defined RTAPI, I was young and foolish and > didn't know about http://c2.com/cgi/wiki?YouArentGonnaNeedIt). > RTAPI was nice looking at ! ... no biggie there ... > -- > John Kasunich > [email protected] > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > Live Security Virtual Conference > Exclusive live event will cover all the ways today's security and > threat landscape has changed and how IT managers can respond. Discussions > will include endpoint security, mobile security and the latest in malware > threats. http://www.accelacomm.com/jaw/sfrnl04242012/114/50122263/ > _______________________________________________ > Emc-developers mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/emc-developers ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Live Security Virtual Conference Exclusive live event will cover all the ways today's security and threat landscape has changed and how IT managers can respond. Discussions will include endpoint security, mobile security and the latest in malware threats. http://www.accelacomm.com/jaw/sfrnl04242012/114/50122263/ _______________________________________________ Emc-developers mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/emc-developers
